SPADEPOKER>POKER NEWS> WSOP: The 17-hour marathon revealed the final 10 of the Main Event final…

WSOP: The 17-hour marathon revealed the final 10 of the Main Event final table

After six grueling days of play, the survivors of the WSOP Main Event were waiting for the seventh day, which formed the final 10 after more than 17 hours of play. For the next two days, they will fight for a 10 million bonus, who is currently closest to get it?

Fearless bluffs, aggressive spots, exciting games or intense emotions - the tournament of all tournaments in the last week brought a brutal dose of poker action, which led up to the moment of the formation of the final table. That's right, from the once 8,663 players, the field has shrunk to the last 10 adepts, and one of them will become the WSOP ME champion during the next two days.

Although it was originally planned to reach the final nine, the organizers ended the long poker marathon by forming an unofficial 10-seat final table, where two players with identical 69-blind stacks will sit as chip leadersEspen Jorstad from Norway and Matthew Su from Britain.

As for the paycheck, everyone knows that this year's champion is in for a whopping $10 million cashout along with a diamond bracelet and eternal glory, but the other contestants aren't going home empty-handed either. Each of them is guaranteed a payout of $675,000 at this moment, from the 8th place each of the players will become millionaires.

The long seventh day of play also produced a hand that immediately earned the title of "Best Fold in ME WSOP History." In the last 14 players, a situation arose in which Farnes opened his KsKd from early position, which he defended from SB Diaz with AsQh. KhQd2d brought an interesting flop, where Diaz check-called his opponent's bet for 2.7m.

The things got mixed up by the turn Qs, which Diaz already bet for 4m, which Farnes only called, but no one doubted that there would be no escape from this spot. Everything was sealed by the river 2s, which Diaz appreciated at 7m. Here, however, the opponent exposed him all-in, but while most of us would have quickly called the remaining 12m, Diaz fell into a 6-minute tank, at the end of which he showed great discipline and was able to fold his cards!

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If he couldn't do it, he would have left the tournament in 14th place for $410,000, but this way he kept his tournament life, which he lost soon after in another spot, but he managed to survive one elimination and with it a pay-jump worth an extra $115,000. How about a decent amount for such a disciplined fold, right? Would you ever be able to fold something similar?

Source: PokerGO, WSOP, Pokernews